Patel v. Atty Gen USA

140 F. App'x 425
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2005
Docket03-4412
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 F. App'x 425 (Patel v. Atty Gen USA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patel v. Atty Gen USA, 140 F. App'x 425 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

Minesh Hasmukh Patel is a native and citizen of Great Britain who received three continuances from an immigration judge during deportation proceedings, and petitions for review of the IJ’s denial of a fourth continuance. We do not reach the merits of Patel’s claim that the IJ abused his discretion in denying the fourth continuance because we conclude that we lack jurisdiction to review an IJ’s denial of a continuance in a removal proceeding.

I.

Patel was admitted to the United States as a non-immigrant visitor for pleasure in 1982. He overstayed his six-month visa, and on that basis the INS filed a Notice to Appear in 1999. In May 2000, at his first deportation hearing, Patel admitted to staying in the United States longer than permitted, effectively conceding deportability. The IJ noted that Patel had no qualifying relatives to support an application for cancellation of removal, but, noting that Patel had been in the United States for many years, offered Patel’s counsel roughly five months to determine whether relief besides voluntary departure was available.

In early October 2000, two weeks before Patel’s next scheduled hearing with the IJ, the INS informed Patel’s mother that she had established her claim for membership in a class of aliens who attempted to file a legalization application between May 1987 and May 1988 but whose applications were refused. A statute enacted in December 2000, the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act (LIFE Act), allowed certain members of the class to adjust their status during a twelve-month period to begin after regulations were issued. The statute also offered protection for qualifying spouses and unmarried children of class action claimants. Patel’s mother, and Patel in derivative fashion, sought to adjust their status under the LIFE Act.

In mid-October 2000, Patel appeared for his second deportation hearing. Patel’s lawyer was absent. The IJ explained that the lawyer was in New York, and noted that “there really has been nothing done by the attorney to try to help this young man solve his problems.” The IJ encouraged Patel’s father, whom the IJ had “called in,” to get Patel an immigration lawyer in Pittsburgh because “the responsibility is the father and the mother [sic] to get legal status and then maybe respondent could derive something through it.” Patel’s father had explained that Patel’s mother was “trying to get status through LULAC [i.e., the class claim for aliens discussed above], but it hasn’t happened yet.” The IJ postponed Patel’s case until April 2001, but warned him that if nothing was happening with his case he might be ordered deported, “[n]ot in April, but probably sometime thereafter.”

At the scheduled April 2001 hearing, Patel’s attorney told the IJ that “there have been some changes in the law” governing the LULAC class claim that might enable Patel to adjust his status. On that basis, the IJ continued Patel’s case until October 16, 2001.

Two months later, in June 2001, the INS published the regulation promised in the December 2001 press release establishing procedures under the LIFE Act for certain class members to become lawful permanent residents in the United States. The regulation provided for a stay of removal and work authorization for certain spouses and unmarried children of aliens eligible to adjust status under the statute.

*427 In August 2001, the Patel family filed an application for legalization under the LIFE Act. A substantial portion of their application is in the record, including a form entitled “Application for Employment Authorization,” which related to Patel’s work authorization as an unmarried child of an alien under the LIFE Act.

In October 2001, Patel appeared as scheduled before the IJ. “We were waiting to see if the respondent would be in a position to adjust his status with his mother, who was seeking to adjust her status through LULAC,” the IJ began. He noted that Patel’s attorney said the adjustment had not yet been accomplished, but “there has been an effort made to have the respondent apply in that regard.” However, the IJ determined that he would order Patel voluntarily to depart, for two reasons. First, he noted that after three continuances, Patel’s removal proceedings had lasted for two years, “and we haven’t even gotten an initial order from the Immigration Court. I don’t think that’s appropriate.” Second, the IJ reasoned that the delay in Patel’s case effectively denied the INS the right to prosecute its case. He added:

There’s an advantage to you and to your client by doing it this way, because you’re not going to have to come back here for any more hearings. If you appeal it to the Board of Immigration Appeals, claiming that I erred by not giving you further time, the case will be there for at least a year, maybe longer!,] and, in the meantime, you can try to see if you can qualify him under the plan that you have come up with, but I’m not going to postpone the case any further!;] but by entering this order today, there will be no immediate consequence provided that you appeal.

The IJ’s Oral Decision struck a firmer tone. He explained that respondent sought postponement of his case so he could obtain legal status through his mother’s membership in the LULAC class. “In accordance with respondent’s request,” the IJ stated, he had granted three continuances. However, by October 2001 Patel’s mother still had not obtained permanent resident status, and therefore Patel’s status had not changed. The IJ reasoned that he could not postpone Patel’s case again because the BIA had held that an immigration court may not withhold action in removal proceedings on the basis of collateral visa proceedings. 1

“In fact,” the IJ continued, “the respondent is not the beneficiary of the approved visa petition with the current visa number as of the date of this decision. Instead, he has a tenuous claim that he might be able to acquire status if his mother can acquire status through the LULAC program.” Having continued Patel’s removal for two years, the IJ concluded, “no further delay in these proceedings is justified under the circumstances.” The BIA used its streamlining regulations to affirm the results of the IJ’s decision without decision.

Patel claims that the IJ abused his discretion and violated Patel’s right to due process in not granting the final continu *428 anee. 2 Patel argues that he should not be deported while the government processes his legalization application, particularly as the government, according to Patel, delayed enactment of the LIFE Act and its regulations. The government argues that the IJ did not abuse his discretion or violate Patel’s right to due process because Patel’s legalization claim was tenuous, and after several continuances Patel had demonstrated no significant progress in establishing his eligibility for relief.

Both parties claim this Court has jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1), which provides for judicial review of final orders of removal.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hasanov v. Atty Gen USA
165 F. App'x 226 (Third Circuit, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 F. App'x 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patel-v-atty-gen-usa-ca3-2005.